25 Iowa 319 | Iowa | 1868
The single question presented for determination in this case arises upon the following facts: Defendant’s intestate was indebted upon a promissory note due in two years, with interest at the rate of ten per
The time when the interest upon a contract is due and recoverable may be fixed by the parties thereto, and is under their control. But if no time be fixed for its payment, it can be recovered only with the debt and not. separately. Yet it is not in fact a part of the debt in the sense in which that word is here used. While the debtor’s obligation to pay the interest at the maturity of the principal debt may be as great as to pay the principal itself, yet he has contracted to pay interest upon the principal only, and the law will not raise an implied contract binding him to pay interest upon interest after the principal becomes due.
The law may permit the recovery of compound interest under special contract, or, in a case where the time of the payment of interest is fixed by contract, will enforce the payment of interest thereon from its maturity, yet it will not imply such contracts in the absence of express stipulations. While such contracts may be enforced, they are not so favored by the law that their existence will be presumed. Nor will interest be allowed as damages for the non-payment of interest in the absence of express contract. See 2 Parsons on Contracts, 380, 382; 1 Am. Leading Cases, 496, 522.
Section 1787 of the [Revision, and the case of Mann v. Cross (9 Iowa, 328), relied upon by appellant, do not change these rules.
The judgment of the District Court is
Affirmed.